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All change in Shangri-la?

Michael Hutt

Published 28 January 2008

Ahead of Bhutan's parliamentary elections, Michael Hutt looks at the reality of the transition of the much romanticised Kingdom to a 'two party democracy'

The small Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan is currently engaged in an extremely interesting exercise. The aim of its ruling Buddhist elite is to take Bhutan a few steps down the road towards becoming a genuine participative democracy, but without unleashing forces that will loosen its own control of the country’s destiny.

This is a carefully calculated response to popular aspirations within Bhutan and to the expectations of Bhutan’s foreign friends and neighbours.

Until the 20th century, Bhutan was ruled jointly by a reincarnate lama and a secular administrator. The country underwent many years of internal conflict between the feudal lords of its various districts during the previous centuries. The establishment of the Wangchuck monarchy in 1907, which brought this conflict to an end, was in large part an outcome of the country’s encounter with the British colonial state.

Since then, the preservation of the sovereignty and distinct cultural identity of Bhutan has been an overriding concern, especially as independent India became more heavily involved in the country’s development and internal affairs. For much of the 20th century, the King held absolute power, supported and advised by a small handpicked political elite. A National Assembly, established in 1953, met for just a few weeks each year.

2008 will see the conclusion of a long and gradual process of political change. In 1998 the King appointed a Council of Ministers, and a prime minister began to represent the country in overseas fora. Bhutan’s first written constitution was drafted in 2004 and was taken out to every district for a long and carefully guided process of comment, discussion and consultation. The constitution provides for elections to a small upper house (part elected and part appointed by the King) and a 47-seat lower house, the National Assembly. Having stated earlier that he would abdicate when the elections were held in 2008, King Jigme Singye Wangchuck (the fourth Wangchuck king) abdicated in favour of his son Jigme Khesar Namgyel in December 2006.

Last year a mock election was conducted across the whole country, with the electorate casting its vote for either a ‘red’ party or a ‘yellow’ party. A peculiarity of the constitution is that while it allows for the establishment and registration of political parties for the very first time, and allows these parties to contest the first stage of its general elections, only the two most successful parties in this round can proceed to the next. The party that wins the higher number of votes then forms the government, while the runner-up forms the opposition. Thus, Bhutan is establishing a ‘two-party democracy’ rather than a multi-party democracy.

The first round of elections to the National Council was held during the first week of January; elections to the National Assembly are scheduled for March. Only two parties contested these first elections: the People's Democratic Party (PDP), headed by an uncle of the King, and the Druk Phuensum Tshogpa (DPT) headed by a former chairman of the Council of Ministers. Bhutan’s Election Commission denied registration to a third party, the Bhutan People's United Party (BPUP), allegedly on the grounds that its candidates did not possess the necessary competence, experience or qualifications. This decision has given rise to some stridency even among bloggers on Bhutanese websites that are normally very strongly nationalistic and fiercely loyal to the establishment.

Bhutan’s population comprises three main ethnic groups, none of which constitutes a numerical majority. During the early 1990s, approximately one half of one of these groups — the ethnic Nepali population —either fled or was expelled to refugee camps in eastern Nepal in one of the world’s least known ethnic conflicts.

These 100,000 people are now very sorely divided over the question of whether to continue to wait to be repatriated (a prospect that remains extremely remote) or to accept offers of resettlement recently made by countries including the USA and Canada. There is evidence to suggest that many of the Nepalis who remain in Bhutan are denied many rights, including the citizenship documentation that would enable them to vote in Bhutan’s new electoral processes.

The unending exile of about one sixth of the population of Bhutan, combined with the denial of civil and political rights to their ethnic kin within the country, is beginning to give rise to a politics of violence that closely mirrors that witnessed in Nepal over the past decade.

The latest example of this was the detonation of bombs in four locations inside Bhutan on 20 January. In an email sent to regional newspapers and selected individuals, a group calling itself the United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan claimed responsibility for the blasts and declared ‘we have come to the conclusion that all the new changes which so much is being hyped is just cosmetic and in reality is not going to benefit all the Bhutanese except a small section’.

Journalists regularly describe Bhutan as a Shangri-la, and its government’s policy of striving for ‘Gross National Happiness’ is often quoted with approval. However, the political realities here are very starkly problematic. Charting the course for the future political development of a tiny multi-ethnic country lodged in high mountains between India and China must be one of the greater challenges of the 21st century.

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18 comments from readers

bhutanman
29 January 2008 at 03:24

Michael Hutt has never been to bhutan and does his research through hearsay. He is also biased in favour of the people he calls refugees and has no credible neutrality on this topic. This is why he chooses to focus on the negatives of the great transformation bhutan is undergoing rather than on the positives.

I am sure he would be much happier if he could report that bhutan's democratic changes were going the Kenya way. Unfortunately for him, he has nothing but scraps to knit-pick about.

IF he were in bhutan, he would understand how real the transformation is and how happy and concerned people are about the developments. For once he should write a positive article on Bhutan.

from bhutan

Tshering
29 January 2008 at 05:22

Hutt present only the glimpses of the Bhutan 'democratization'. Inside Bhutan, the establishment is trying to create 'democratic ' government without genuine democratization. There is no freedom of organization, peaceful assembly. Freedom of speech and press is a far cry. Recently 67people in Mongar, Samtse and Samdrup Jongkhar were imprisoned after 'regime's kangaroo court found them guilty under National Security Act (1992) and Penal code of Bhutan (2004). These innocent people were in fact exercising freedom of speech and peaceful assembly.

The democratic process is just a tactics to hoodwink the mounting international pressure on its treatment of minority ethnic.

Michael Hutt
29 January 2008 at 09:43

Just for information, as a response to the first comment: I visited Bhutan as a guest of the Royal Government in 1992, and spent two weeks in the country. I met several ministers, and I was granted a long audience by His Majesty King Jigme Singye Wangchuck. In 1993 I convened the first international academic conference on Bhutan, to which several members of the Bhutanese administration contributed papers.

bhutanman
29 January 2008 at 12:57

Well I am glad to hear that you have been to bhutan and that too as a guest of the government. I was expecting your defense to be about how can one enter when a visa is not granted. It seems the government was open to people like you in the beginning and then became uneasy with journalists who came with their central thesis already established and used their visit to the country to simply add to their 'credibility'.

In all of your papers your basic argument begins with the conclusion that all the nepalese in the camps are original bhutanese and that it is not possible that a large number of them could be illegal immigrants. Clearly this is problematic factually.

The immigration officials and the security forces may have been harsh on the people in the south during the 1980s or even cruel. But that would make it a humanitarian matter, not one of statehood.

If the nepalese leaders were really serious about seeking justice they should have pursued it a long time ago. But they never did that. They simply assumed that their claims were valid and made the illogical extension that the 'victims' were therefore citizens.

The entire matter has always been political as far as the nepalese leaders are concerned and that is the reason that even basic redress for ill-treatment has never been achieved never mind repatriation.

getting back to your article you conclude "Charting the course for the future political development of a tiny multi-ethnic country lodged in high mountains between India and China must be one of the greater challenges of the 21st century." Touche, but you forgot to mention the 25 million nepalese surrounding bhutan that has added another dimension you seem to see only one side of.

Phædrus
29 January 2008 at 13:10

Perhaps somebody could explain the nature and origin of this apparent animosity between the peoples of Nepal and Bhutan.

Tshewang Wangchuk
29 January 2008 at 14:11

This article and the book “Unbecoming Citizens” by the same author Michael Hutt are biased manifestation of a Bhutan seen through his narrow lens without really understanding real issues. I had given up reading the book when blatant lies were naively put forth as facts. For example, it was made to sound like the main highway from Phuentsholing to the capital Thimphu was constructed by forcing the Lhotshampas (southern Bhutanese) to work on it. Even worse, the national highway is depicted as a road “leading to the King’s palace.” What is incredible is that although this may have been said by the people he interviewed in Nepal, there was no attempt to understand the other side of the story (in this case the real story). In reality, people from all over Bhutan, including my parents, contributed labour towards constructing the first national highway on which all Bhutanese now travel. The writer does not understand the concept of woola or labour contribution that we had in the past that was used to build community infrastructure such as irrigation canals and schools.

In this article Hutt erroneously states that “only two parties contested these first elections” Bhutan has seen in December 2007. The National Council (Upper House) is non-partisan and candidates are not affiliated with any of the political parties. Twenty of the 25 seats are elected from the 20 districts, and the remaining five appointed from various distinguished professions. The National Assembly (Parliament), on the other hand, has candidates belonging to political parties. In a condescending overture, the writer remarks that the current political change is an “extremely interesting exercise.” The mock elections in 2007 were conducted to familiarize voters with the electronic voting machines and the process. And the four imaginary parties were assigned the colours red, blue, yellow and green. The recent real elections saw two Lhotshampa candidates elected for the National Council, and no less than thirteen Lhotshampa candidates will be contesting for seats in the parliament.

Where is there a perfect democracy in the world today? Bhutan has to forge on ahead and evolve into a system that is built on the principles we hold dear. We do not need the blessings of people such as Michael Hutt who refuses to clean his lenses once in a while. Passion has overridden objectivity and professionalism.

karmala
30 January 2008 at 21:45

Sadly, in journalism we seldom see the truths being depicted as it is, no more or no less. Truth may be distorted if more is added, and no justice is done to it if less is given. Such type of journalism would indeed be a blessing and a gift to the public. Many journalists choose to see only what they wanted to see, and leave out intentionally or out of ignorance, the other parts that are essential for the construction of the whole truth--the complete story. In my opinion, purposely leaving out the parts of the story that may contradict or weaken one's assertions, is as bad as writing false reports. I'm sure all journalists are aware of the ethics and responsibilities associated with the profession, which were probably extensively covered in their training; whether they abide by it is quite another matter.

There is no easy solution to the Bhutanese refugee problem, and it will take an immense cooperation and understanding between the parties involved. The problem itself is more complex than journalists like Hutt report it to be. According to him it seems to be black and white; we (all the Bhutanese people in the country from all ethnic backgrounds) ganged up on those of Nepali-origin and drove them out of the country, and among them there are no criminals who committed crimes, even against their own people, and try to destroy the peace and security of the country. And those people at the camp (those who are genuine Bhutanese citizens) are all innocent.

Writing extremely biased articles like this, and showing negative and sarcastic attitude towards the Bhutanese leaders, and the very democracy we are trying to establish in our country do not help either. If people like Michael Hutt really wants to help, he could do so by writing balanced articles, yet not compromising the truth, and promoting healthy dialogues between not only the leaders of both sides, but also the people. You can't try to win one side at the expense of the other. To my knowledge there is not yet a decent leader at the Nepal refugee camp who is respected by the people there, and who really cares for their well-being and interests. A lot of self-proclaimed leaders form violent groups and plan attacks in Bhutan, and even use violence on those at the camp who disagree with their agenda. This will definitely not help. Who would want terrorists in their country?

My hope and prayer is that we find a workable solution with the refugee problem for the benefit of those who are innocent Bhutanese citizens.

bhutanman
01 February 2008 at 13:36

phaedrus,

if you want to read one side of the story you could read the stuff churned out by Michael Hutt over the last 10 years. If you want to read bhutan's side you could read.....well bhutanese aren't really that fond of writing so there isn't much to read. Is it any wonder that bhutan's name has taken such a bad rap over this course of time.

however, you can also exchange views with bhutanese online at fora such as kuzuzangpo.com, kuzoo.net, bhutantimes.com, kuenselonline.com etc.

PS

there is no animosity between the 'people of nepal and bhutan'. there is a problem created by self-proclaimed leaders of illegal immigrants in bhutan who have grand political aspirations. the people of bhutan and nepal are on average very okay with each other. bhutan imports millions of $ of items from nepal every year and thousands of pilgrims visit nepal each year.

Michael Hutt
01 February 2008 at 17:50

Readers who have made it to the end of these comments will now have a better understanding of the sensitivity of Bhutanese political issues.

One factual error has been pointed out, and I am grateful to Tshewang Wangchuk (though he really should read my book more carefully: simply quoting what someone says does not mean that you agree with them). I do accept that my views are influenced by the fact that I have spent many weeks talking and listening to Bhutanese refugees in Nepal: but why is this illegitimate? I have not been able to gain access to Bhutan to hear the other side of the story a second time, and that will explain some of what these commentators perceive as my ‘bias’. By the same token, however, they have not had the opportunity to hear the voices of the (ordinary, non-political) refugees, and maybe this explains theirs.

In the preface to my book Unbecoming Citizens, I described the people of northern Bhutan as welcoming and honourable and stated that my encounters with them were among my most cherished memories. I believe that many of them will recognise my article for what it is: an honest attempt to describe objectively the challenges and the opportunities that face their extraordinary country.

Maya
03 February 2008 at 05:12

Bhutanman, in other words you mean since Michael Hutt was the guest of the Bhutanese Government he should have written the Government version of refugee issue. If there is nothing to hide why doesn't Bhutan Goverment give visaa to the journalists like Mr. Hutt. Government also denies permit to the foreigners to visit southern Bhutan on the ground of security. If it is true how come the National Council election was conducted without a hitch as reported by the Government's mouthpiece.

Though Bhutan has been my ageold home, I and my siblings are the fourth generation Bhutanese of Nepalese ethnicity I prefer not to return to Bhutan. Government of Bhutan under the rule of the King Jigme Singye has successfully sowed the seeds of hatred among the other Bhutanese specially ngalongs against the Southern Bhutanese. There is too much hatred in Bhutan towards each other. Life is not worth all this.

Tshewang Wangchuk
03 February 2008 at 17:05

Maya, we can never make everyone happy. And Bhutan certainly does not have to please everyone. Many, many, journalists since Hutt have come and reported from Bhutan, from all over. In Bhutan we strongly abide by the principles of "tha damtshi, ley jungdrel." Now this loosely translates to "loyalty and appreciation, and cause-effect." Loyalty in this sense means more like not stabbing someone in the back, and loyalty to truth - loyalty to a greater good for the country and its people. And what happens is the result of another action, something that caused it. Westerners, especially those brainwashed with the ideologies of capitalism and individual rights, will not understand this well. I think Hutt was allowed in as a guest of Bhutan first, but when he became a champion for biased information I am sure we didn't want to invite him as a guest of Bhutan again.

I don't know how much you are in touch with reality inside Bhutan. There is no hatred like you mentioned. We still live, work and play side by side with people from all parts of Bhutan. The people have elected two Lhotshampas to the National Council, and we are happy to have at least 15 Lhotshampa candidates vying for seats in the parliament. The recent bomb explosions are nothing more than cowardly terrorist activities aimed at undermining stability and peace. Contrary to "shaking" the country (as another writer in this paper, Frelick, has exclaimed), this has brought all Bhutanese even closer against any external threat to the peaceful transition and the stability we have enjoyed. It has made everybody more vigilant.

There will be many people who will continue to find faults with anything Bhutan does. And so be it - we don't have to justify everything with a response. If we are true to the people of Bhutan and for a greater good of the country, that is what matters in the end. The media is always hungry for sensationalism. When the hype and ego fades away, only the truth remains. You cannot dismiss a Bhutanese monarch who the world looks up to for his leadership, compassion and vision just like that. He is a hero and role model to many. I have many Lhotshampa friends and colleagues, and resent your assumption that hatred is everywhere. We are not that gullible, and life would certainly not be worth such hatred - you are right.

umoktan
03 February 2008 at 18:51

Oh ya the World look up to Jigme Singye for compassion who made 100,000 people homeless overnight.

taghioff.info
06 February 2008 at 13:23

This is one of the most interesting threads I have ever read. I will declare my interests and say I am at SOAS (in the Anthropology / Media department) and so know Michael as a distant acquaintance.

What is very interesting here is that in the absence of physical movement in and out of Bhutan, but with access to the internet, a thread like this becomes a place where an academic on Bhutan outside the country comes into contact with commentary from within the political scene. That this commentary contains comment on philosophical differences to knowledge creation is very interesting:

"Now this loosely translates to "loyalty and appreciation, and cause-effect." Loyalty in this sense means more like not stabbing someone in the back, and loyalty to truth - loyalty to a greater good for the country and its people. And what happens is the result of another action, something that caused it. Westerners, especially those brainwashed with the ideologies of capitalism and individual rights, will not understand this well. I think Hutt was allowed in as a guest of Bhutan first, but when he became a champion for biased information I am sure we didn't want to invite him as a guest of Bhutan again."

I Particularly like this bit: "and loyalty to truth - loyalty to a greater good for the country and its people" Here is a very different idea of truth to the one put around in Western Universities, at least officially. So truth and the greater good are synonymous. It does rather raise the question of "the greater good as defined by whom" which in turn is a question that goes to the heart of what it is to transition towards democratic practice, and the standards of knowledge creation it implies.

Becuase Bhutan may in some ways embody a loving community, but democracy is deeply unsentimental in its formal approach to knowledge (if at the same time deeply emotional in its choice of candidates). If knowledge cannot stand the test of debate, it is supposed to be discarded, although of course few democracies live up to this.

So are we seeing the difficulties of a democratic transition in Bhutan played out here and now on this thread?

BTW, academics at SOAS are generally guilty of far too rosy a view of their zone of obsession, rather than the reverse of being over critical, since their obsession is most often born of love...

maelstrom101
11 February 2008 at 01:43

The issue of the people in the camps will continue to be a polemic and controversial issue. It is easy to develop a misconstrued view of the nation of Bhutan. Outside perspectives of Bhutan are extremely polar and skewed: either its over-romanticized claims of a Shangri-la, and the biased and ludicrous accusations of a totalitarian regime hellbent on ethnic cleansing.

The Bhutanese are not simple-minded farmer folk happily in bucolic bliss; nor are they scheming offshoots of the Third Reich, trying to establish one mother race. I'm trying illustrate the point that they're just normal everyday people with everyday problems, trying to adapt to a ferociously changing world.

It takes some courage and tenacity to adapt to a complete change in government and political structure, and the Bhutanese have it in spades.

"One nation, one people" is not the goal of one ethnic predominance , but the goal of national harmony; of a strong sense of fraternity and community between all Bhutanese regardless of race.

I Hope Bhutan continues its progress with continued resilience,determination and optimism!

bhutanman
11 February 2008 at 06:43

sorry to repeat this post here, but here it is:

if you want to understand the tone of the nepalese people in the 1980s and early 1990s, read this brochure of the Bhutan People's Party. It sure does not sound like the voices of victims. Sounds like the words of trouble causers who got what they deserved!

the tone is arrogant, superior and quite clearly they looked down on the culture of very country they were trying to make home!

http://www.bhutannica.org/index.php?title=BPP

bhutanman
11 February 2008 at 06:45

Hutt said:"I have not been able to gain access to Bhutan to hear the other side of the story a second time, and that will explain some of what these commentators perceive as my ‘bias’. By the same token, however, they have not had the opportunity to hear the voices of the (ordinary, non-political) refugees, and maybe this explains theirs."

that's all I meant. We have a bias, and so do you. So it would be appreciated it if you would stop trying to sound so 'academic' and 'objective' and 'neutral'. Clearly when writing about the refugees claiming to be bhutanese, you are none of the above.

maelstrom101
13 February 2008 at 02:11

well said bhutanman. Hutts and Frelick's stance on Bhutan is skewed and extremely biased. The presentation of only one side of a story with all its embellishments is not responsible journalism nor "activism," its blatant propaganda.

LodoD
03 March 2008 at 09:29

Phædrus asked

I don't know about animosity - perhaps a fear?

Consider what happened then in the context of events in neighbouring Sikkim not long before this issue arose.

During British rule and after there was also a large influx of Nepali speaking people into Sikkim - eventually Nepalis became far more numerous there than the native Lepchas and the Bhotias.

By the 1970s Nepali dominated anti-royalist parties in Sikkim were demanding more representation - some even wanting Sikkim to become part of Nepal

In 1973, anti-royalty riots at the palace led to India intervening and appointing an administrator who effectively took control of the country away from the Chogyal (king).

In 1975 Sikkim was of course merged with India becoming the 22nd state of the repbulic.

It seems likely that the elite in Bhutan - some of whom had very close ties with the Chogyal of Sikkim feared a similar fate if Nepali migration and population increase was not checked in Bhutan

Then too around that time there were the agitations of the Gorkhaland National Liberation

Front in parts of the neighbouring Duars and the Darjeeling District of West Bengal. Again fomented

by Nepali speakers who had migrated become the majority in these areas over the preceeding century.

This GNLF movement became very violent by the mid-1980's (today it would be labled terrorist) - and it

must have had considerable influence on sections of the Nepali speking population living in Southern Bhutan.

This expulsion of Nepalis considered to be illegal migrants from Sothern Bhutan took place at around the same time as these other events occured in Sikkim and neighbouring parts of West Bengal.

Undoubtedly this would have had had a great influence on Bhutanese perceptions at the time.

LD

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About the writer

Michael Hutt is Professor of Nepali and Himalayan Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. His recent publications include Unbecoming Citizens: Culture, Nationhood and the Flight of Refugees from Bhutan (Oxford University Press, 2003) and a translation of the Nepali novel Basain by Lil Bahadur Chettri, published as Mountains Painted with Turmeric (Columbia University Press, 2008).

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